Global geopolitics

Decoding Power. Defying Narratives.


Crisis, Control, and the Quiet Expansion of Surveillance

While much of the US is focused on the ongoing Globalist engineered unrest in Los Angeles, few are asking a basic question: Why now?

The pattern is familiar. A crisis erupts, whether organically or not, and soon after, new security measures are rolled out as the answer. In this case, tools like facial recognition, biometric tracking, and AI-powered surveillance are being proposed as necessary responses to public disorder. (Digital ID & CBDC)

Just last week, ICE signed a $30 million contract involving Palantir technology, a company known for its work in predictive policing and data tracking. These systems are being put in place quietly, and quickly.

What’s surprising is who’s backing it.

Some of the loudest support for these tools is now coming from the political right, the conservatives, from people who once warned about government overreach and surveillance. Many of them now argue that these technologies are acceptable, even necessary, as long as they’re aimed at illegal immigration or public unrest. Digital ID systems, expanded police powers, even military involvement on domestic soil, ideas that would have raised concern a decade ago are now welcomed by many under the banner of law and order.

But these technologies don’t distinguish between political beliefs. Once a system of control is built, it rarely stays within its original scope. Powers granted during a crisis tend to remain long after the emergency passes, and they often expand.

What’s happening now is a planned reshaping of the relationship between the individual and the state. Surveillance tools designed to track some people today can just as easily be used on everyone tomorrow.

There is nothing about public safety on this. It’s a shift toward centralised control, and it’s happening in plain sight. I have come to accept I am a slave to a system I never new existed. I have come to accept that people don’t have a clue they are slaves, they believe they have a say in things. All that said, I am not going to let them genocide me.

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